Activities & Tours in Byron Bay
23 listings
23 listings
FeaturedDawn flights over the Tweed Valley hinterland, with the Byron lighthouse visible on a clear morning and macadamia farms rolling out below. A champagne breakfast follows landing. The 5am pickup is non-negotiable, but the light at that hour is the whole point.
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FeaturedMorning kayak tours launching from Clarkes Beach, with the Cape Byron headland as your landmark and dolphins as a genuine possibility. Accessible to beginners, priced in the middle of the Byron activities market. The lighthouse circuit is the one to book.
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Tallow Beach runs for kilometres south of Byron without a crowd in sight. Arakwal protects coastal heath, wetlands, and Bundjalung country from the development that's taken everything else. No entry fee, no facilities. Bring water and go early.
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One of the last patches of coastal rainforest between Byron and Lennox, Broken Head delivers a short canopy walk and a genuinely quiet beach. No facilities, no crowds. The kind of place locals keep quietly to themselves on a busy long weekend.
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The Brunswick River meets the ocean here, giving swimmers a rare choice: surf or flat water, same beach. Gentler than Byron's main breaks, reliably uncrowded, and backed by low dunes rather than infrastructure. Dolphins at the river mouth most mornings.
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Byron's main community sports and cultural complex on Ewingsdale Road. Courts, fields, event space, and a calendar that runs on local rhythms rather than tourist ones. Worth checking what's on before you drive out.
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The working 1901 lighthouse at Cape Byron marks the easternmost point of mainland Australia. The headland walk takes around 30 minutes, whale season runs June to November, and sunrise, with the light still turning, is the version worth setting an alarm for.
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Free, open-access concrete at the edge of town, this is where Byron's skate scene actually lives. Rails, ledges, a bowl, and a crowd that ranges from first-timers to regulars who've been sessioning here for years. No bookings, no cost, no frills.
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A café inside a wildlife sanctuary in the Knockrow hinterland, where the koalas are the main event and the menu plays a supporting role. Best approached as part of a full day out, particularly if you're travelling with kids who need feeding between animal encounters.
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Australia's most easterly point, reached via a 3.6-kilometre coastal walk past whale-watching lookouts and heathland. The 1901 lighthouse is still operational. Arrive early morning or late afternoon for the best of it.
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The 3.7-kilometre loop around Cape Byron headland takes in Wategos Beach, The Pass, and the easternmost point of mainland Australia. Humpback whales pass through in season, dolphins are common year-round. Go at sunrise or late afternoon to beat the crowds.
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Free, windswept, and sitting at the eastern tip of mainland Australia, this lookout on Lighthouse Rd delivers ocean views on three sides and a picnic area that beats any restaurant terrace in town. Arrive at dawn or after 4pm to avoid the tour bus window.
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A concrete platform above the rocks at Byron's eastern point, Fisherman's Lookout delivers unobstructed Pacific views and front-row seats to the humpback migration between June and November. No entry fee, no crowds at dawn. Just bring binoculars.
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Byron's longest-running surf school runs lessons off Main Beach, where the break is forgiving enough to actually get beginners to their feet. Group lessons keep costs reasonable. Social, high-energy, and well-placed for first-timers who want the full Byron introduction.
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The easternmost point of the Australian mainland sits at the top of the Cape Byron Walking Track, a 3.7-kilometre loop above Byron Bay. Humpbacks pass through from June to November. Sunrise here is the first on the continent. Free, well-maintained, and worth the early alarm.
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A volcanic outcrop a kilometre off Main Beach, protected marine reserve status means the grey nurse sharks, leopard sharks, and turtles here treat divers like furniture. Access is via local dive operators. The northern shallows work well for snorkellers.
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A coastal heath track on the northern headland above New Brighton, with views stretching south to Cape Byron and west to the ranges. No entry fee, no crowds. Go on a weekday morning and you'll likely have the headland to yourself.
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Right on Jonson Street, where Byron's foot traffic peaks by nine. Palace holds a prime position on the main drag. No deep review trail yet, but location like this earns its own audition. Worth a look on a quieter weekday morning.
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A flat, shaded green space on Jonson Street built on the old rail corridor. Families use it to decompress between beach runs, and it connects directly to the cycling path heading south through town. Free, unfussy, and genuinely useful.
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A ridge-top pull-off on Coolamon Scenic Drive where the Byron hinterland spreads out across macadamia farms and rainforest canopy. No facilities, no crowds. Just the view and the winding road that brought you here. Dusk is the right time to arrive.
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Byron's quietest long beach, four kilometres of exposed Pacific coastline running south from Cape Byron to Arakwal National Park. No kiosk, no crowds, no frills. The locals come here precisely because the tourists don't know to.
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A working 300-acre farm in Ewingsdale where the cattle, pigs, and market gardens supply the on-site Three Blue Ducks restaurant. Part produce store, part open paddock, part long lunch destination. Ten minutes from town and a world away from it.
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A short rainforest-to-headland walk inside Broken Head Nature Reserve, with coastal views back toward Byron's lighthouse and almost none of the foot traffic that plagues the Cape Byron track. Go early, bring water, wear shoes you can trust on uneven ground.
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